Turnaround 09/09/05
THERE IS AN ALTERNATIVE, SO USE IT
WE LIVE IN THE AGE OF THE CONSUMER
and we all expect to have a choice.
Sometimes those choices can be pretty
unpalatable, but we still expect some sort of
alternative. But when businesses struggle
they seem to have few options. Often the
only course of action is to appoint an
insolvency practitioner and stand back and
watch as he or she sells on your business at
a vastly knocked down price. Or, perhaps
even worse, the business is given the
corporate kiss of death with the assets being
split up and sold off like so much junk.
Don’t get me wrong, businesses do have a
natural life span and business closure is an
inevitable part of a market economy. But for
every business that should be shut there is
another one that should be rescued. Saving
a business needs a specialist with a distinct
set of skills and experience. Being a
turnaround specialist is quite distinct from
being an insolvency practitioner, although it
is understandable how and why the two
roles are confused.
The objective of the turnaround is to keep
the business going. But the business can
only be kept trading successfully in the
long-term if there is genuine and significant
change. What needs changing will vary
every time. Maybe the finances need
restructuring, perhaps the management has
to be re-invigorated with new faces and
fresh talent, maybe there has to be a radical
restructuring of the production process or
the goods and services on offer.
Managers and owners who face problems
could be forgiven for throwing in the
towel and letting their business slip away.
In that sense turnaround is not the easy
option. It requires even more hard work
and commitment. And even then it doesn’t
always work. But when it does, it is a fantastic result.
HOW PETER CHARLES LTD TURNED
STRATEGY INTO REALITY
Oone of the key ways forward for large and
diverse corporations with geographically
widespread and diverse business entities.
Shared services is a form of internal
outsourcing where a function – such as
accounting – is standardised and reengineered.
SSCs allow business processes
to be brought together in a single location
which supports multiple business entities
on a customer-supplier basis. While it
might be relatively straightforward to
make the strategic decision to create
a SSC, actually creating one is a different
matter. Peter Charles recently helped one
large quoted company turn their SSC
strategy into reality.
The diverse and successful retailer has a
turnover of around £4 billion spread across
four well-known brands. A strategic review
agreed by the board concluded that the
divisions within the group should share a
centralised finance function and logistical
support. Peter’s work was difficult enough
in terms of the skills and experience
required for the technical IT and finance
tasks. However the work also needed a
high level of people skills. The project to
relocate the finance department of one of
the divisions from the West County to
Milton Keynes had been started using the
services of a leading global professional
services firm. But the project had run
aground and was going nowhere. When
Peter and his team were called in time was
fast running out. The closure and
relocation meant redundancies. In line
with best HR management the staff of the
department to be closed had been advised
of the move six months previously. But
with the drift and delay there was a real
risk that poor morale could reduce service
levels. The FD responsible for setting up
the SSC called in Peter to kick start things.
The FD said: “Peter’s goal was to move
towards our objective. He was excellent at
identifying the structure which was needed
to make the SSC happen and he could also
work with our people to ensure the
necessary change took place.”
As Programme Manager, Peter had control
over the nature and direction of the work
and complete responsibility to achieve the
required result.
This approach meant Peter took control of
tactics, goals, objectives, deliverables,
planning, choice of software tools and
hiring and firing – including standing
down the big-five consultancy. Peter’s
involvement in the project lasted nearly
10 months and at the height he had a
team of 30 people. Much of the ultimate
success of the project can be put down to
the fact that Peter and his team created
detailed plans for a series of inter-linked
projects – each headed by a qualified and
experienced finance professional. The
company’s staff were re-enthused to help
with ensuring the migration was a success
by being clearly targeted on what was
expected of them and being rewarded for
early completion of their tasks. As a result
of Peter’s intervention, the programme to
merge finance departments was
successfully completed within the original
timeframe. Perhaps equally importantly,
the new SSC is providing the required
service level and the required standard of
financial control and risk management.
Commenting on Peter Charles and his
team, the FD added: “It was a particularly
successful programme. Our objectives
were achieved ahead of time and to
budget. In essence nothing was dropped
in the process of managing the change to
an accounting system that supports a
business with total sales of £4.5 billion.
The most important element was the
organisation design so that our people had
a proper place to fit into, Peter and I
worked closely on what was the most
appropriate organisational structure.”
Transforming a failing finance department in five months
A PAN-EUROPEAN DISTRIBUTOR, A WHOLLY
owned subsidiary of a US-based manufacturing
company, had been through two finance directors in
quick succession. The client admits that both the
accounts and the department were in a mess.
Management accounts were being produced a month
after the month end, and despite the long lead time,
were wrong. The finance department, which had
pan-European responsibilities, was in free-fall. For instance, the automated
sales reports were adding up
the sales from the various countries in the local
currencies, rendering the total figure as totally
meaningless. You try adding up pounds with lira and
see if the answer makes any sense.
Peter went in with two main objectives: first he had
to make an assessment of which finance staff
were up to the job they were supposed to be doing and this inevitably resulted
in some churn
within the finance department: secondly, he
needed to implement a centralised Oracle
system covering the operations in Italy, France,
Germany, Spain and the UK. That meant closing
down some outlying finance departments.
At the same time, Peter was working out the job
specification and then recruiting a finance
director (in effect to take over the work he had
started) to take charge of the European
business. Since his appointment, the FD that
Peter sourced has been promoted, adding IT
and human resources to his accounting and
financial reporting responsibilities.
The systems are now world-class. For instance,
comprehensive daily sales figures for the
previous day covering the whole of the
European operation are now produced 20
minutes after the start of the new working day.
And the relationship with the US parent
company finance department has been
transformed. Sales were increasing by the time
the project was completed. While not trying to
claim all the credit, by the time the assignment
was finished the client could be confident that
the sales force was being supplied with accurate
data. The client said: “Peter is cool under
pressure. He has excellent people skills
providing leadership at a difficult time without
being over authoritarian. He prioritised the work
and he got on and did it. He refreshed the
finance department, got it up and running and
to this day it is a great success.”
PETER WILLIAMS EXPLAINS HOW A NEW
LAW COULD BOOST TURNAROUNDS
Few small- and medium-sized companies
(SMEs) are aware of a provision relating
to Company Voluntary Arrangements
(CVAs) in the new Insolvency Act.
However, if a company in trouble
took advantage of the new provision,
it would offer more control over its
destiny, effectively buying time‚ from
creditors whilst a rescue plan could
be put together.
The new Insolvency Act allows a troubled
small company to apply for an automatic
moratorium from their creditors for 28
days, a period that can then be extended
with creditor consent. This major change
allows smaller companies to restructure
their balance sheets via a Company
Voluntary Arrangement (CVA) but without
all the administrative problems associated
with an Administration Order.
This change to CVAs has not received a
lot of publicity. But in the current difficult
business climate, smaller companies in
trouble should be aware of this as it
could remove pressures from creditors,
giving them breathing space and thinking
time to put together a rescue plan.
The automatic moratorium will enable
directors of small companies who intend
to put forward a proposal for a CVA
to obtain protection for their company
and prevent action being taken by
creditors effectively ring-fencing the
company. No bank or holder of a fixed
or floating charge can appoint an
administrative receiver.
CVAs were rarely used as the existing
CVA procedure did not adequately
protect companies against creditors
whilst they try to put forward proposals
to creditors. A further change from
the current Administration Order process
is that during the moratorium, the
directors remain firmly in control of
management and day-to-day issues rather
than this being transferred to an
insolvency practitioner as it previously
did. Under the new procedure, an
insolvency practitioner will need to be
appointed, but to act as a nominee and
to monitor the position.
The new provision only applies to
businesses with less than 50 employees
and turnover of less than £2.8 million or
assets worth less than £1.4 million.
A well thought-out CVA has every chance
of successfully enabling a company to
sort itself out with the benefit of
additional time and less stress/pressure,
but it certainly presents some interesting
challenges for lenders who will need to
redraft their own loan documentation in
response to this important change.
This new piece of legislation is just
the first change in Insolvency Law this
year, with further changes due and
represents the biggest overhaul of
Insolvency Law since 1986.
SEEING THE WOOD FOR THE TREES
THE LATEST ASSINGMENT FOR PETER Charles Ltd is typical in many ways
of the
turnaround assignments we have seen
over the last year or so. The management
spend a lot of time poring over numbers
and that is fine. But you need the right
sort of numbers and you need the
numbers to be right. But like many
managers we meet they have got
themselves confused by the numbers.
When we first arrived they were unable to
see the wood for the trees.
We’ve worked with them to take a hard
look at their business.
Together we worked
out the key numbers they needed. And
once they had done that they were able to
start to see a path leading them forward to
secure the future of their business.
In the trough of an economic wave
PETER CHARLES LOOKS AT THE WORK
OF A RUSSIAN ECONOMIST WHO MAY
HAVE SOMETHING TO TELL US ABOUT
OUR CURRENT ECONOMIC SITUATION.
The Kondratieff long wave cycle (K-wave)
was originally used to explain long
wave economic cycles. Its originator
Nickolai Kondratieff was a Russian
economist (1892-1938) in Stalin’s
Agricultural Academy and Business
Research Institute (“Long Waves in
Economic Life” – originally published in
German in 1926). Kondratieff’s major
premise was that capitalist economies
displayed long wave cycles of boom and
bust ranging between 50-60 years in
duration. Kondratieff’s study covered the
period 1789 to 1926 and was centered on
prices and interest rates.
Whether Kondratieff has a point is open
to dispute. He identified four distinct
phases the economy goes through. They
are a period of inflationary growth,
followed by stagflation, then deflationary
growth and finally depression. Some
characteristics are as follows:
Inflationary Growth (expansion): stable
to slow rising prices, low commodity
prices, low and stable interest rates,
rising stock prices. The period might
also be characterised by strong and
growing corporate profits and
technological innovations.
Stagflation (recession): rising prices,
rising commodity prices, rising interest
rates, stagnant to falling stock prices.
Stagnant profits, rising debt. This period
usually sees a major war that contributes
to the commodity and price inflation,
and to the rising debt and misdirects
business resources.
Deflationary Growth (plateau): stable to
falling prices, falling commodity prices,
falling interest rates, sharply rising stock
prices, profit growth but probably not
as good as in the inflationary growth
phase. Sharply rising debt. Possible
period of considerable technological
innovation. Excess debt contributes to
speculative bubbles.
Depression (depression): falling
prices, rising commodity prices
(particularly gold), stable interest rates,
falling stock prices, falling profits, debt
collapse. As the stock market collapses
numerous scandals will emerge. A major
war occurs that helps contribute to end
of the depression phase and the start
of the new expansion period.
A key question for us is whether the
Kondratieff wave is valid for the post
WW2 economy given the fiscal and
monetary tools of a modern economy.
Some argue that the trough of the K-wave
has already passed. Their count is from
the stock market trough of the Great
Depression in 1932. Add the average 54-
year K-wave period and we are in the
spring expansion of the new K-wave.
Most analysts take the last K-wave to have
made its final trough in 1949 when
interest rates and prices bottomed. The
effects of the Great Depression were
softened by WW2 and it was in the 1950s
that the world firmly started to shake off
the long two decades of depression and
war. The K-wave has followed quite true
to form with the solid growth and low
inflation of the 1950s and 1960s followed
by the commodity/price inflation and
recession driven 1970s. Commodity prices
peaked in 1980.
Following the steep secondary recession
of the early 1980s the markets embarked
into the Autumn K-wave plateau.
We had stock market and real estate
bubbles, a collapse in commodity prices,
a collapse in interest rates and low
inflation. But we also had a huge build
up in debt that allowed us to buy our
way out of the recessions of the early
1980s and early 1990s.